Lifenotes: Gloria Grant

Gloria Grant


Condolences to Amy Grant and her family on the passing of her mother, Gloria Dean Napier Grant, on April 30, 2011. The Nashville native was 80 years old and had devoted her life to her faith, family and a variety of charitable causes.
She supported her husband of 60 years, Burton Paine Grant, throughout his medical career and also pursued several business interests of her own, including selling her famous fruitcakes at the Green Hills Market. She was a founding board member of Nashville! Magazine and began the private jewelry business Lynwood Hampton Collectables.
Grant was an active supporter of the Fanny Battle Day Home, Friends of Children’s Hospital (founding member), and the Nashville Public Library Foundation. She enjoyed family gatherings, Bible study, golf, bridge, sewing, gardening, cooking, and entertaining.
She is survived by her husband Burton and her four daughters, Gloria Kathleen Grant Harrell (Dan), Mimi Dean Grant Verner (Jerry), Carol Ann Grant Nuismer (Jack), and Amy Lee Grant Gill (Vince Gill), as well as several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that friends remember Gloria by doing an unexpected act of kindness, or making a gift to Lipscomb University or Alive Hospice. Visitation will be held Tuesday, May 3 from 4-8 p.m. at Brentwood Hills Church of Christ, 5120 Franklin Pike. The funeral service will be at the church Wednesday, May 4 at 2 p.m. with visitation at 1 p.m. Online guestbook and details here or at (615)254-8200.

Sarah Darling, The Roys Launch Fan Promotions

Sarah Darling and Mr. Met


Black River’s Sarah Darling is spreading the word about her single “Something To Do With Your Hands” with the Something To Do With Your Fans radio promotion, which has her appearing at Major League Baseball games.
She kicked off the initiative in April when the NY Mets hosted the Houston Astros at Citi Field. Darling performed the national anthem and then went to a luxury suite to entertain contest winners, radio station execs, and members of the media with an acoustic set. In between innings, the Mets played the video for, “Something To Do With Your Hands” on the jumbotron.
The event was promoted heavily by Long Island’s WJVC-FM. Darling gave away tickets during the station’s drive time shift, at the local Best Buy, through her website, and via the media.

• • • • •

The Roys are celebrating their redesigned website by giving fans a chance to win an iPod Nano® loaded with songs from their latest album Lonesome Whistle. The updated site has new videos, photos and stories. The contest runs through Sunday, June 5 here.
The Roys launched their debut album for Rural Rhythm Records with a nine-day, six-state media blitz of television stops, personal appearances, and radio visits. The brother-sister duo appeared on Fox, Better TV, ABC-TV’s What’s The Buzz, Daytime, GAC-TV, and Daily Buzz in support of the disc.
The video for current single, “Coal Minin’ Man,” remains on the ballot for GAC-TV’s Top 20 Country Countdown, and fans can vote for the duo here.

2011 InCharge—On the Cover: Chris Young

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Click to Order InCharge


Label: RCA Nashville
Current Album: Neon (to be released in July)
Current Single: “Tomorrow” (the fastest rising single of his career)
Current Producer: James Stroud
Hometown: Murfreesboro, TN
Management: ShopKeeper Mgmt./Marion Kraft
Booking: William Morris Endeavor Ent./Rob Beckham
Recent Hits: Three consecutive No. 1 singles: “Voices,” “The Man I Want to Be” and “Gettin’ You Home”
Awards: Last year Young won the Breakthrough Songwriter Award at the 22nd Annual MusicRow Awards, while amassing multiple ACM, CMA, and ACA nominations and his first GRAMMY® nod.
RIAA Certs to date: “Gettin’ You Home”–Gold Digital Single; The Man I Want to Be–album approaching Gold
Touring: Young will join Jason Aldean on his My Kinda Party Tour beginning in June. He recently wrapped more than six months on the road with Rascal Flatts.
Birthdate: June 12
Website: www.chrisyoungcountry.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/chrisyoungmusic
Twitter: @ChrisYoungMusic
Chris Young has distinguished himself as a singer/songwriter who honors country music’s finest traditions while adding a fresh, new chapter to the genre’s legacy. The opening months of 2011 have been especially eventful for Young, as his No. 1 single for “Voices” became the first country record in 25 years to be re-released to chart-topping status, while his current single, “Tomorrow,” has become the fastest rising hit of his career. Young also recently received his first Grammy Award nomination, recognized for Best Male Country Vocal Performance for his No. 1 song “Gettin’ You Home.”
On the horizon this year is Young’s third studio album, Neon, which he recorded with producer James Stroud. Kicking off the album is new single “Tomorrow,” which sold 30,000 digital downloads in the first week of release.
Young knew early on that he wanted to pursue a career in country music. Raised just minutes away from Nashville, in Murfreesboro, he began making trips to Music Row at a young age, trying to land a record deal. He began performing while still in high school, and was playing 150 dates a year by the time he was in college. Before eventually landing a deal with RCA, Young had a regular gig at the famed Texas honky-tonk, Cowboys. “It was a great way to get experience,” he says. “I had a seven-piece band and we played three nights a week. Plus there were major acts constantly going in and out of there, so I’d get to watch their show and see how they worked the crowd. It was a good learning experience for me.”
Young’s self-titled RCA Nashville debut made him country’s best-selling new male artist in its year of release and earned him a nod in the Academy of Country Music’s Top New Male Vocalist category. His 2009 sophomore project, The Man I Want to Be, is quickly approaching Gold certification. It launched three consecutive No. 1 singles with the title track making a three-week run at the top of the charts.
Like his heroes Keith Whitley and Randy Travis before him, Young doesn’t see himself as the savior of country music, just a lucky guy living his dream. “I love playing music,” he says. “There’s no way I could do anything else.”

Eye On Idol (4/29/11)

Casey Abrams


There was no joy in Idol-ville, as mighty Casey Abrams struck out on Thursday night’s (4/28) American Idol results show. After one near elimination earlier this season, the quirky multi-instrumentalist swung and missed for good this time.
On Wednesday’s (4/27) Carole King songbook-themed show, he chose “Hi-De-Ho (That Old Sweet Roll),” a Blood, Sweat, & Tears hit which might have been a little too left field even for his fans. Still, his growly duet with Haley Reinhart on Tapestry opening track “I Feel The Earth Move” hit me in all the right spots so I’m a little bummed to see him go. Seriously, when’s the last time someone name-checked Oscar Peterson on Idol? Let me answer that: never. But as a fellow member of the “beardo” clan, I’m thrilled he took his unique sensibility this far.
Joining Abrams in the bottom three were Jacob Lusk and Scotty McCreery for his first trip. I originally figured Lusk’s number was up, after struggling so badly with “Oh No Not My Baby” AND the duet with James Durbin on “I’m Into Something Good.” I don’t really see him hanging around much longer, but I guess stranger things have happened this season (see also: Pia’s elimination).
No matter what the Bottom Three results suggested, McCreery gave a strong rendition of “You’ve Got A Friend.” He’s clearly trying to stretch himself as we approach the big finish, but in doing so he runs the risk of alienating his core voters. It’s a tightrope walk from here on out.
Reinhart and Lauren Alaina continue to give solid performances, and Reinhart seems to be gaining some ground since Stefano’s elimination. She’s had the most trips to the Bottom Three, but avoided it altogether this week after a strong take on King’s “Beautiful.” I’m still personally waiting for Alaina’s young age to cause a stumble, but she might make me eat my words if she keeps singing as well as she did on “Where You Lead (I Will Follow).”
For my money, it looks like Durbin’s game to lose. He’s consistently delivered every week, and he’s playing very smart. Clearly understanding that Carole King is the consummate songwriter, he opted to let the Shirelles hit “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow” speak for itself–no pyro, no gimmicks, just the band and Durbin’s voice. And man, it was just electric.
Next week, the five remaining contestants perform a current song as well as one from the 1960s. On the results show, Jennifer Lopez will be joined by Pitbull to perform “On The Floor,” and Lady Antebellum will also perform.

Friday Roundup: Wiseman, Gentry & Montana

Craig Wiseman shared his story and experience with Belmont University students at an Insider’s View seminar on April 27. Wiseman, the founder of Big Loud Shirt Industries, advised students that creativity flourishes when you let down your guard and are not concerned about what other people think.

• • • •

Teddy Gentry, member of the country group Alabama, and Porter-Gentry Productions, is releasing Teddy Gentry’s Best New Nashville album, exclusively at Cracker Barrel Old Country Store®, starting May 16. Produced by Gentry, the album includes 12 songs performed by 12 new artists. Gentry says this is his way of giving back because he knows from his own early experiences how hard it is to make it in this very tough business.
Tracks on Teddy Gentry’s Best New Nashville:
1.     Every Mile I’m Missing You – Jimmy Stewart
2.     I’m Gonna Cry – Chanel Campbell
3.     That’s The Kind Of Love I Need – Garrett Steele
4.     A Good Place To Turn Around – 3 Lanes Crossing
5.     A Better Woman – Laura Fedor
6.     In His Hands – Chip Davis
7.     I’ll Find You – Samantha Landrum
8.     Chip Away – Dillon Dixon
9.     My So Called Life – Southwind
10.  Long Lost Smile – Brad Long
11.  Run Baby Run – Adrianna Freeman
12.  Are You Ever Gonna Love Me – Amber Shalene

• • • •

©2011 Grand Ole Opry Photo: Chris Hollo


Mercury Nashville singer/songwriter Randy Montana has been added to Taylor Swift’s Speak Now Tour. He has been confirmed for eight shows in June with stops in Detroit, Pittsburgh and Foxboro, to name a few. Montana made his second appearance at the Grand Ole Opry on April 22 and performed his current single “1,000 Faces” and “Last Horse.”

 

 

Voice Gets Louder, Adds Starpower

The Voice coaches. (L-R) Adam Levine, Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green and Blake Shelton.


NBC’s new talent discovery show, The Voice is upping its star power with the addition of Reba McEntire, Monica, Sia (Furler) and music producer Adam Blackstone as new advisors.
These new advisors will join with the previously announced coaches Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Adam Levine and Blake Shelton to assist during the upcoming “battles” competition phase of the show which will last for four episodes and is staged inside a boxing ring. Each coach will pit two artists on their eight act team against each other in a series of duels designed to shrink each team to four members.
Reba will of course work with Blake Shelton, Green with Monica, Levine with Maroon 5 music director Blackstone and Aguilera will join with singer/songwriter Sia.
Not unlike another well known talent contest (on another network), the advisors will be tasked with helping to improve the contestants image and performance.
The Voice premiere was last week’s top rated show attracting over 11.8 million viewers.
 

2Trios: TBP Gets CMT Noms; Harters Play Soundcheck Benefit

The Band Perry performed on the Today Show (4/27) after CMT host Evan Farmer joined Hoda Kotb and Kathie Lee Gifford to announce nominations for the 2011 CMT Music Awards. TBP garnered nominations for Group Video, Video of the Year and Breakthrough Video of the Year.

(L-R) Evan Farmer; Neil Perry; Kimberly Perry; Reid Perry; Brian Philips, President, CMT.


• • •
Bigger Picture Group’s The Harters join the line-up for ReTune Nashville’s Anniversary Celebration on Tuesday May 3 at Soundcheck. Also performing will be Keith Anderson and Chad Warrix in this benefit concert to bring relief and recovery to musicians affected by the 2010 flood. Tickets for the benefit concert and art auction are $35 and on sale now at www.retunenashville.org

(L-R) The Harters: Michael, Leslie and Scott Harter.

Baldrica Becomes An Average Joe

Tom Baldrica


Are label co-heads Shannon Houchins and Colt Ford really just a couple of Average Joe’s as the name of the label might have you believe? Not according to newly hired label President Tom Baldrica. “It feels to me like this model is the future,” says Baldrica “I like the authenticity that the artists radiate from the stage. These folks are out there touching the fans.”
The Label
Baldrica exited Sony Music last year, where he had served since 1993. “I was very flattered that there was a lot of interest in me while I was on vacation,” he smiles. “But this Average Joe’s Ent. opportunity just kept coming back into my head. It felt right. They’ve been smart about building the business and paying for things themselves. Looking in Shannon’s eye and talking to Colt, the vibe was great and that’s an important piece of what I’m all about. I’m 120 days into it now and know it was a great decision, no doubt.”
Tony Morreale, who had worked with Baldrica at BNA/Sony was responsible for connecting the parties. “I went out to see a couple of shows and  stood with them and watched in utter amazement,” remembers Baldrica of his Colt Ford musical baptism. “We were in Birmingham Ala. at the Hank Jr., Jamey Johnson, Colt show and I watched 8,000 people sing the words to every one of Colt’s songs. I’ve spent the last 18 years of my life getting songs on the radio and prior to that playing them on the radio, so for me to be sitting there amongst that group knocked me out.”
Ford’s press describes him as a grassroots country phenomenon. “It’s an accurate description,” Baldrica insists. “Colt has done this the old fashioned way. He started playing in towns to small groups which would grow to a few hundred people and eventually large crowds. Each time he’d return the crowd would grow by word of mouth. It started in Georgia with he and Shannon, who are co-owners of the label and life-long buddies. Momentum from the shows inspired a few radio stations to play his music, but there wasn’t a promotion team or anything, just Shannon, Colt, some CDs and a van stuffed with t-shirts in the back. The reaction was the same in every town. Get that happening once or twice and it’s nice, but watch it fifty times and more and you start to believe you have a trend happening, something is striking a nerve. So yeah, grassroots fits.”
The facts support Baldrica’s story. Tunecore, the company that handles Ford’s digital distribution recently awarded the Average Joe’s Entertainment (AJE) artist a sales award for selling over one million downloads since 2008, including over 375,000 via iTunes and Amazon. In addition, AJE’s Memphis-based indie physical distributor, Select-O-Hits, reports that Ford has sold over 500,000 physical album units at retailers such as Walmart, Target, Best Buy, FYE and Hastings. On the touring side, Ford played for over 620,000 people last year. (His current tour schedule (see www.coltford.com) includes 31 dates between April 14–June 26, 2011.)
Shannon Houchins, AJE CEO, first found success as a Hip Hop record producer in the mid-90s in Atlanta selling over 40 million albums. He owns studios in Atlanta, owns a printing company and a Hip Hop label among other things. “He’s a mogul, there is no doubt about it,” agrees Baldrica. “But he is an artist friendly music guy who is about everybody winning. There is a great spirit about him. He loves the music and the business and is doing some things to try and change it. I worked for arguably the best record man this town has ever seen, Mr. Galante and learned a lot, so it’s especially interesting to move from the corporate level to the street level.”
The Music
On the street it’s all about the music. Ford’s hybrid sound tells stories and deals with many of the same emotions that more traditional country artists sing about. A big difference is that he combines verses in rap style prose with melodic choruses. “Recitation and talking records were here long before me,” says Ford who hails from Athens, Georgia. “And they’ll be here long after me. I’m a country artist and I want people to know how much I genuinely respect this music and my fans.”
Ford’s new album, Every Chance I Get debuts May 3. Produced by Houchins and Jayson Chance, it features guest appearances from a cross section of well known artist including Luke Bryan, Craig Morgan, Charlie Daniels, Tim McGraw, Eric Church, Trent Tomlinson, Nappy Roots and Nic Cowan, and more.
“Colt will tell you that he isn’t that great a singer,” says Baldrica. “So to get the message across from the verse through the musicality of the hooks makes sense. Is he a country rapper? Is it recitation, which has been a part of this format for years? Regardless of what term you use there are great studio musicians, great writers and tremendous artists involved. They’ve seen the shows and asked to be a part of it. Do I hope they lend a credibility factor to it, certainly. Will it help people play some of those tracks, sure, but the set up on the guests is just to make it better music. And honestly, Colt’s done it this way from the very beginning.”
Ford is also enjoying songwriter success. He co-wrote the Jason Aldean single, “Dirt Road Anthem,” and the new Brantley Gilbert single, “Country Must Be Country Wide.”
The Marketing
Moving from a company that affords “Cadillac” marketing plans to driving a “Ford” might be daunting for an executive who only recently switched gears from the largesse of major label budgets to a stripped down grassroots mentality. “The guys in this town at the majors are all doing great work,” says Baldrica. “But the AJE model, like others you see in town, are built for the current environment and the future. Those big corporations have larger overheads, larger business plans and larger everything. And the fact is that everyone has to learn to make money on nickels and dimes. So the adaptation process is different.”

Colt Ford (Click photo to hear "Country Thang" )


But Baldrica is only too happy to talk about the setup for the upcoming album on May 3, Every Chance I Get. “It’ll be a bit regionalized,” he says. “There will be more in Atlanta and Athens than you’ll find in Seattle and Portland. We expect to ship around 85-90,000, which is a great number for us. So there will be more of a regional spread certainly in the Southeast and up the Atlantic seaboard and into the Midwest. The farther you go west there will be less and less. If the dream grows we will get it out there.”
“There’s no secrets to a lot of what we’re doing,” says Baldrica. “Like doing bundles with pre-sales and giving people a chance to win autographed merchandise. We are doing online listening parties, win-it-before-you-can-buy-it with radio stations and leveraging Ford’s 201,000 Facebook friends. We are also using the synergy of our company by cross promoting across all our websites and artists on the roster. Colt was part of CMT’s Big New Music weekend which was tremendous, and we are doing a promotion with Verizon which has CF and AJE artist ringtones. We also have promotions with various websites such as www.camospace.com, which someone called a ‘Facebook for rednecks.’”
In addition to the modern day weaponry, Colt Ford also has dedicated fans. “This voracious fan base are evangelists, writing notes, sending the videos around and spreading the word,” says Baldrica. “There is this group of people that feel like they are on the inside. They want to tell the rest of the world. So there aren’t any big marketing secrets, just a lot of volume and intensity from devoted fans who want to help scream from the roof tops.”
According to Baldrica, Ford’s fans are not all young males with hats turned back. “There’s a perception that his demo all have gun racks in their pickups, and yes, there certainly are some of those. But I’ve been to enough shows to tell you that there are young girls that dig Colt and soccer Moms, too! The Hip Hop sound is something that the younger generation has grown up with and enjoys. Typically, what parents dislike about Hip Hop is the lyrics. But it works for Colt because they love that his lyrics are about God, momma, family, country and hard work. So the kids dig the sonics and the parents are cool with the message. Result: they can share the music together. And Colt does all ages shows with no alcohol so the families can enjoy the music together during the day and then Mom and Dad can come out and have a few adult beverages later that evening. In a sense we go fishing where the fish are, but we also go to mainstream country radio plus sites like AOL The Boot and Country Weekly trying to cover as many bases as possible. Once they know about Colt they respond and want to own that music. Our job is to leave no stone unturned.”
Having an artist with a solid touring base allows for a somewhat different radio strategy than is used by many developing artists who are depending upon radio exposure to help build that touring base. “My goal is to increase the awareness, increase the markets and get more places for him to be able to go play,” says Baldrica. “Because every time he plays he wins. He’s selling more music, tickets and merchandise which makes everyone happy—club owners, local radio stations, promoters, record labels and the artist.”
The Future
What does Baldrica think about some of the new experimental marketing strategies involving singles and albums?  For example, Blake Shelton’s “Honey Bee” (WB) seems to have set off waves of discussion among marketers as to the importance of single sales in a world of declining album sales. (read it here) But is this an especially good model for a smaller label like AJE?
“When people love a particular song there is no evidence to suggest they will only buy that track and then never buy the album,” says Baldrica. “In most cases they will buy the track, then the record and maybe even the ringtone or a special version. That is the prevailing wisdom so what Warner Bros. did was spectacular. Of course they had a lovely platform. Blake Shelton was hosting the ACM show, did a great job and is red hot. So with a great plan in place, 140,000 people bought the song making it the artist’s fastest moving radio single ever. Those 140,000 people are now primed to buy the album. So maybe the new revenue mantra is, ‘take it when you can get it.’ Peter Strickland might have invented or unleashed a new strategy. It was brilliant.”
Visit averagejoesent.com for a complete list of the label’s artist roster.
 

Weekly Chart Report (4/29/11)



Sunny Sweeney recently performed in Allentown, PA as part of the WCTO New Cats On The Block series. Her current single “Staying’s Worse Than Leaving” just debuted at No. 74 on the CountryBreakout Chart. (L-R): Sweeney, WCTO PD George King and Republic Nashville’s Director of Northeast/Midwest Promotion Shari Roth.Jim Murphy


SPIN ZONE
Keith Urban’s “Without You” earns a second week on top of the CountryBreakout Chart, with 96 stations on board. Closing up the gap behind him in a tight 2-3-4 configuration are Ronnie Dunn’s “Bleed Red,” Brad Paisley’s “Old Alabama” (also the greatest spin increase), and The Band Perry’s “You Lie.” Also screaming toward the top are Taylor Swift’s “Mean” at No. 8, and Luke Bryan’s “Country Girl,” which jumps to No. 11.
Summer songs are working their way into heavy rotation as well. Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem” is already up to No. 27, and Jake Owen appears to have a hit on his hands with “Barefoot Blue Jean Night” at No. 32. And be on the lookout for Brantley Gilbert, whose “Country Must Be Country Wide” storms up to No. 55 in its second week charting.
Before his “Colder Weather” even has a chance to cool off, Zac Brown’s latest single “Knee Deep” (featuring Jimmy Buffett) rockets onto the chart at No. 59. Thompson Square is back with a new cut called “I Got You,” that zooms up to No. 76. Corey Smith also makes his first chart appearance at No. 78 with “Twenty One.” And a curious final chart entry at No. 80 comes courtesy of “The Good Life,” recorded by none other than Donnie & Marie Osmond.
Frozen Playlists: KNAF, Nashville XM 11, WCMS, WHMA, WKWS, WMEV, WTCR, WZZS
RADIO NEWS
Citadel’s KATC/Colorado Springs has named Jim Murphy its new Program Director, effective immediately. Most recently Murphy served as VP Country Programming for Jones Radio Networks and Dial Global Radio Network in Colorado. His career also includes time at KFKF/Kansas City, WOKQ/Portsmouth, and ABC Radio Networks. Reach him at 719-593-2714 or jim.murphy@citcomm.com






Upcoming Singles
May 2
Sunny Sweeney/Staying’s Worse Than Leaving/Republic Nashville
Lucy Angel/Serious/GForce
Russell Hitchcock/Far Enough Away From Colorado/Better Angels
Mark Cooke/I Love It/CVR/Quarterback
May 9
Thompson Square/I Got You/Stoney Creek
Glen Templeton/I Could Be The One/Capstone
May 12
Corey Wagar/Hurricane/GTR
• • • • •
New On The Chart—Debuting This Week
Artist/song/label — chart pos.
Zac Brown Band and Jimmy Buffett/Knee Deep/Southern Ground/Atlantic — 59
Lucy Angel/Serious/GForce — 63
Billy Currington/Love Done Gone/Mercury — 71
Rachel Holder/Chocolate/All Entertainment — 72
Sunny Sweeney/Staying’s Worse Than Leaving — 74
Thompson Square/I Got You/Stoney Creek — 76
Ash Bowers/I Still Believe In That/Stoney Creek — 77
Corey Smith/Twenty One/Average Joe’s — 78
Donny & Marie Osmond/The Good Life/MPCA — 80
Greatest Spin Increase
Artist/song/label — spin+
Brad Paisley/Old Alabama/Arista — 461
Blake Shelton/Honey Bee/Warner Bros./WMN — 436
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow — 416
Jake Owen/Barefoot Blue Jean Night/RCA — 334
Luke Bryan/Country Girl/Capitol — 328
On Deck—Soon To Be Charting
Artist/song/label — spins
Kelly Parkes/Girl With A Fishing Rod/Lofton Creek — 205
Flat River Band/I’m Alright I’m Ok/FRB — 204
Jordan Carter/Daddy Never Had A Chance In Hell — 186
Greg Hanna/Makin’ Love Real/Pheromone — 184
Ashley Gearing/Five More Minutes/Curb — 184
Most Added
Artist/song/label — New Adds
Zac Brown Band and Jimmy Buffett/Knee Deep/Southern Ground/Atlantic — 20
Brantley Gilbert/Country Must Be Country Wide/Valory — 18
Ash Bowers/I Still Believe In That/Stoney Creek — 16
Jake Owen/Barefoot Blue Jean Night/RCA — 15
Thompson Square/I Got You/Stoney Creek — 15
Rodney Atkins/Take A Back Road/Curb — 13
Sunny Sweeney/Staying’s Worse Than Leaving/Republic Nashville — 11
Jason Michael Carroll/Numbers/For The Lonely/Quarterback 11
Lucy Angel/Serious/GForce — 11
Billy Currington/Love Done Gone/Mercury — 11
Jason Aldean/Dirt Road Anthem/Broken Bow — 10

Show Dog-Universal’s JT Hodges stopped to visit the morning show crew at WMAD/Madison in support of his forthcoming single, “Hunt You Down.” (L-R): WMAD’s APD/Midday’s Steph Peters, WMAD Morning Host John Flint, Hodges, WMAD Morning Host Tammy Lee, and WMAD OM, Mike Ferris.


Stealing Angels visit WKLB/Boston to share their new single “Paper Heart,” which hit No. 69 on the CountryBreakout Chart this week. (L-R): Skyville Records President Kevin Herring, Tayla Lynn, Jennifer Wayne, Mike Brophey (WKLB/Boston), Caroline Cutbirth, Skyville Records Director Regional Promotion/East Theresa Ford.


Columbia’s Josh Thompson recently stopped by WIVK/Knoxville to co-host the midday show prior to playing a date on the Jagermeister Tour. (L-R): Columbia VP/Promotion Jimmy Rector, WIVK MD/middays Colleen Addair, Thompson, WIVK OM/PD Mike Hammond, Columbia Director/Field Promotion David Friedman

Music Row Executive Charlie Fach Passes



Charles Edward Fach Jr., former Mercury Records Executive VP of A&R died on Monday, April 25 at Summit Medical Center in Hermitage , TN at the age of 82. A memorial service will be held Saturday, May 7, 2PM at the Hermitage Funeral Home , Nashville, TN.
Charles Fach  was born on September 10, 1928 to Charles E. Fach and Anna (nee Stark) Fach in Camden, NJ. He was raised in Pennsauken, NJ and attended Amon Heights Elementary and Merchantville High School. He served in the U.S. Navy as a radioman during WWII from 1946-1948 and attended Ursinus College where he graduated with a BA in Business in 1952.
Fach began his career in the music business in 1952 at RCA in Camden designing business forms. He was quickly promoted to regional sales manager and served as marketing director for several years. In the late 1950’s, Fach joined Mercury records and in 1961 he became President of their subsidiary label Smash. As the head of Smash, he worked closely with artists like Roger Miller, Bruce Channel, the Angels, and the Left Bank. Fach went on to become Executive VP of A&R at Polygram records where he successfully developed the careers of Bachman-Turner-Overdrive, Kool and the Gang, the Bar-kays, and the Ohio Players. In 1979, Fach moved to Nashville to head Musiverse, a production subsidiary of Polygram, where he was executive producer of several country albums with George Burns, including the single “I Wish I Was 18 Again”, written by Sonny Throckmorton. He also had two top ten hits with the Kendalls on Mercury Records (via MusiVerse) with  “Before I Cheat” and “If You’re Waiting On Me, You’re Backing Up.” In the early 1980s, Fach started his own label, Compleat Records, which produced several top ten singles with Vern Gosdin including the #1 hit “I Can Tell By the Way You Dance (You’re Gonna Love Me Tonight)” and “If You’re Gonna Do Me Wrong (Do It Right)” .
Fach is survived by his ex-wife Marcia of Hermitage, his son Charles of Hermitage, his daughter Kimberly Lawson of Gig Harbor, WA., three grandchildren, Nick Mareno, Mariah O’Brien, and Sophia Lawson, one sister, Joan (Edward) Praplaski of Wayne, PA, and several cousins. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the ASPCA or the Grammy Foundation.

Charlie Fach (R) with (L-R) Buddy Killen, Burt Reynolds and Bobby Goldsboro.


(L-R) Robert Metzgar, Charlie Fach and Sonny Throckmorton celebrating last year after Fach’s second hip replacement surgery.